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Sounds weird. If you are the one asking, shouldn't it be "can I" instead of "can you"?
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杨以轩Oct 16 '12 at 13:18

Is it the case that you have seen that sentence and now you'd like to know where the noun should go if you want to add "clothes" to that sentence?
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Olle LingeOct 16 '12 at 15:52

Are you using 'you' to colloquially refer to the generic third person (as in 'can one wash one's clothes at the hotel?') or are you using it literally to refer to the second person?
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deutschZuidOct 17 '12 at 1:34

1 Answer
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Not sure if it is really what you want. But if you are asking the hotel staff whether they help you wash your clothes, then it should be:

"Do you provide laundry service?"

你有提供洗衣服务(service)吗?

The basic order of a Chinese sentence is usually in the form of subject-verb-object arrangement. From the two sentences above, 你 is the subject, 洗 and 提供 are the verbs, 衣服 and 洗衣服务 are the objects. Please refer to this article for more examples on the Chinese grammar.

I suspect the OP is using 'you' to refer to the generic third person, not the second person. So I would say generically: '在这宾馆里可以洗衣服吗?'. Your second suggestion is probably what I would say and is a good alternative to the first.
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deutschZuidOct 17 '12 at 1:37

@JamesJiao, yes, I think the first one is quite ambiguous, because it could be mistaken to mean washing clothes DIY.
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杨以轩Oct 17 '12 at 6:55